“The demand is not what it was and the supply is too much,” said Hollywood Casino Perryville General Manager Bill Haynes.

With the new casino just an hour away, revenue from this July compared with last dropped more than 32 percent.

“I don’t know that it will ever come back to the levels of when they were the only game in town,” said Perryville Mayor Jim Eberhardt.

Now casino officials in Perryville are asking the state to take back a third of their 1,500 videogaming machines.

“It you have a bunch of games on your floor and nobody’s playing them, there’s no feeling of excitement,” Haynes said.

That excitement is alive at Maryland Live!, where they are pulling in more than a million dollars a day, a number they projected. On Opening Night, Joe Weinberg said, “We will be the number one taxpayer by far in the state.”

But a new hand may soon be dealt. Lawmakers will hold a special session this week to discuss a possible sixth casino at the National Harbor in Prince George’s County–30 minutes from Maryland Live.